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Polygamy in India

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: IE

Subject: Miscellaneous

Context: Assam has passed the Assam Prohibition of Polygamy Bill, 2025, becoming the second state after Uttarakhand to ban polygamy.

About Polygamy in India:

What it is?

• Polygamy refers to a marital system where one person has more than one spouse at the same time. In India, it is regulated differently across religions, states, and tribal customs.

Historical Context:

• Traditionally practiced in several communities, polygamy was restricted over time through religion-specific reforms — e.g., the Hindu Marriage Act (1955) outlawed bigamy for Hindus.

• Muslim personal law historically permitted up to four wives; tribal groups followed customary practices recognized by the Constitution.

Laws Governing:

Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs – Bigamy prohibited under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955; second marriages deemed void.

Parsis – Prohibited under Parsi Marriage & Divorce Act, 1936.

Christians – Prohibited under the Indian Christian Marriage Act, 1872.

Muslims – Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Act, 1937 allows Muslim men to have up to four wives; hence not criminal under BNS Section 82.

Goa – Under the Portuguese Civil Code, monogamy is the rule for all; a unique historical clause allows a Hindu man a second marriage under rare conditions (unused since 1910).

Tribal Groups – Exempt under the Constitution (Fifth & Sixth Schedule); customary laws prevail.

Recent State-Level Bans:

Uttarakhand UCC (2024): Outlaws bigamy for all residents except Scheduled Tribes.

Assam Bill (2025): Makes polygamy a cognisable, non-bailable offence; penalties up to 7–10 years; bars convicts from government jobs and elections; tribal areas exempt.

Significance:

• Reflects push toward gender justice and uniform legal standards in marriage.

• Tests the legal boundary between personal law autonomy and legislative reform.

• Raises questions on minority rights, state powers, and the future trajectory of UCC in India.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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